PS: Okay......I won't say it. They did alot better than the Leafs. The good news is that now that Boston is in the finals Kaberle will likely sign & the Leafs will get Boston's 1st & 2nd round picks. God knows they need all the pics they can get.

Sweet !! Pies look wonderful!! What, No pics of those new GI Tools (birthday gift) in action?Whats our hydration? you use a starter right ? and cake yeast ? Matter of fact give up the whole recipe on the beauties, please...!! Bakin tomorrow here in Jersey land oh and I am going now to take the dough out of the fridge ! so it will be a 8hrs fridge 24 hr room Thanks Bud! John

Sweet !! Pies look wonderful!! What, No pics of those new GI Tools (birthday gift) in action?Whats our hydration? you use a starter right ? and cake yeast ? Matter of fact give up the whole recipe on the beauties, please...!! Bakin tomorrow here in Jersey land oh and I am going now to take the dough out of the fridge ! so it will be a 8hrs fridge 24 hr room Thanks Bud! John

Hey Johnny,I'm loving the new tools; huge difference, thanks again!I use Marco's formula & modify it according to the season; the maximum amount of starter that I use is 5% of water weight (no commercial yeast). I use water as my constant & begin with 1650g of flour & if necessary add until get the right consistency. The hydration is somewhere between 58-60%. I mix for around 10 minutes in the spiral & then bulk ferment.

I've been working with a variation of Marco's formula for some time now & finally figured out what Marco meant buy his reference that "pizza is not bread". What blows me away most about this dough is how it does not increase in volume at all during fermentation in comparison to bread which more than doubles. The final dough is so full of flavor & a dream to work with.

Last week I wanted to satisfy my curiosity & used the same formula with 100% Caputo Red & again Marco's right; it's completely different.

Neapolitan pizza season is finally here, you oven is up and running. the pizzas look great. is your oven a high dome oven? if so do you have to raise your pizza to finish it?

Hi Larry,It most certainly is! Thanks. Yes, if I'm not mistaken it's about 21" in height. As you can see from the first picture, I use a fireplace grate for my baking fire which works really well. I always dome my pizze for a quick second, to me it adds that extra something.

Thanks Matthew,I am running in the area of 65% and seems a bit wet maybe I should kick it back ? using like 02% IDY and it takes abput 20 hours but yes It has doubled I will ball and fridge now until around 1 pm then room til the 6 pm party. Hoping for the best? and yes the tools are great I espacially love the 9" perforated turning peel with the 59" handle May use the new oven today did I say New oven?

I love the melding of the neapolitan charring with the more new york cornicione proportions.

Would you describe the texture of your masterpieces? judging from the "book" treatment on the last pie I would expect that they are on the soft (ie not crispy) classical neapolitan end of the spectrum.

PS: Okay......I won't say it. They did alot better than the Leafs. The good news is that now that Boston is in the finals Kaberle will likely sign & the Leafs will get Boston's 1st & 2nd round picks. God knows they need all the pics they can get.

Matt

Just say it, Bro!

Sharks still didn't go where they wanted to go. Vancouver was the better team. Not to make excuses but if you have four core players (Thornton, Boyle, Clowe & Heatley), among others, playing with dislocated shoulders, a cut-off tip of the pinky, a damaged left MCL and a broken left hand, they wouldn't have won the cup anyway against Boston's big D-men.

Leafs...I said it before and I'll say it again...they'll be a team to watch out for in the next couple of years. Burke knows what he's doing during the restructuring and Wilson, imho, is a good coach albeit his tendency to call out players.

Logged

Mike

"Anyone who has never made a mistake has never tried anything new." - Albert Einstein

I've been working with a variation of Marco's formula for some time now & finally figured out what Marco meant buy his reference that "pizza is not bread". What blows me away most about this dough is how it does not increase in volume at all during fermentation in comparison to bread which more than doubles.

Thank you Craig. The statements are mainly relative to the amount of starter used specific to Neapolitan pizza. It's a little difficult to explain the how's & why's but since I have progressively decreased the amount of starter used over the years from 5% of total weight to the very low amounts I'm using now & direct vs indirect mixing methods etc, the end product has been totally different. I can finally say that this is the product that I have been striving for all along. Now the hard part; consistency.